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doobin

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Everything posted by doobin

  1. Terex bought Schaeff, like they did with Matbro. References I used: TAKEUCHI | PRODUCTS | Compact Excavators / Hydraulic Excavators | TB219 TB219/TB016 Possibly the UK standard long arm spec is listed elsewhere.§ Terex-Schaeff HR 11 - specifications, manuals, technical data - Mascus UK HR11 TerexHR2.0Mini Excavator I think this is the latest Terex 2 tonner, for comparison. It's not all about power to weight, the best thing about a Tak is the residual values. It's like a secondhand MS181 on eBay- you can't loose!
  2. Forget chainsaw gloves- they're pointless. Get yourself some decent hardwearing work gloves.
  3. I had an 014 on hire once, gutless wasn't the word, especially against the Schaeff. Apparently it's the same pump as the 016, but the engine is smaller so that might be why. Yeah the Schaeff rams are easily the size of those on a 2.5 ton machine, or three ton JCB. They are top mounted which is part of the reason but there's a hell of a lot more power there than any other 1.5 I've ever seen. They did the same engine and pump in a 1.6 ton and 2 ton machine (HR12 and HR13) with longer reach- I'd love one of those but never seen one for sale locally. The tilt hitch has given me about a foot extra reach but of course break out force will be greatly reduced. Time will tell. I do struggle sometimes with lack of weight, but the arse end has a lot of tailswing which helps (or no, as the case often is! ) I love over-engineering, you don't see it often enough.
  4. Just checked the Tak specs again. Whilst dig depth is close, if we can take 'Max Floor Dig Radius' to mean 'reach' , then the TB219 has an extra foot over the 016. That will make a good amount of difference
  5. Nice one Matthew, I hope it performs for you. I've just been checking the specs of the TB219 vs my old girl. My HR11 whilst only 1.47 ton puts out 13.4kw vs the TB219's 11.5kw, or the TB016's 10.1KW. Max dig depth is 2.2m for the Schaeff, 2.27m for the TB219 and 2.17m for the TB016. Only 10cm between all three- is this right?? Would have thought the TB219 would have had much more reach than the TB016. I always knew the Schaeffs punched above their weight but had no idea it was that much! Just a shame she's getting on a bit. Looks lovely with her new tilting quick hitch though Would love some pics of your new girl when you get her!
  6. Where are you based OP?
  7. What country are you in?
  8. They should be shot. It's that simple.
  9. Top tip- if it's that battered and you only have a file, use a flat file to quickly remove the damaged bit and put the correct top plate angle on it. Then bore into it with a round file to get the other angles right. This way is far quicker than using a round file alone, and you can put a lot more pressure on to remove the damaged section. Much easier when clamped solidly in a vice rather than still on the bar.
  10. Yeah that's the one. Really reveals which is your stronger sharpening hand when you put it on a previously hand sharpened chain that looked perfect Take it steady, no undue pressure on the stone, and I've got very good results. Hand filing is still quicker for little 12" 3/8p chains though.
  11. I think that's a rubbish, clichéd ideology that was invented by self help merchants for the denizens of the rat race who spend every day in a concrete cubicle. You enjoy it? How is that work then? Consider yourself blessed, as I do, to do what you love and make a living from it. Get down the yard, and offhire any woman who tells you otherwise. You also do a wide variety of trades, as do I. If I get bored, I try my hand at something else.
  12. I'd go with a Granberg precision grinder if you're the type who takes an unhealthy interest in how sharp you can get your chain. Bench grinders are OK for doing a mullered chain, but how can one wheel fit a chain perfectly throughout it's life, let alone a dozen chains. It can't. With a file you would compensate, adjust as neccessary. The Granberg lets you do this AND get the teeth all the same size. Perfectly in budget with a couple of packs extra stones too.
  13. Get down the yard and and carry on tinkering with something. ANYTHING beats sitting indoors bored. I had you down as the type to potter around down the yard on a Sunday? Can't beat it! Or get round your mates places or the local for a few beers. We're meeting down the barn for a BBQ and beers later to watch the storm
  14. She's a beauty alright. Will keep going for another thirty years I should think if looked after. Why don't folk build things to last any more?
  15. Love it! :lol:
  16. You'd not say you were proficient after three weeks playing mud pies with a hired 3.5t then? This is a discussion forum as far as I'm aware, and anyone can either agree, semi agree or ridicule me. I don't much care which
  17. Could you not say that about any trade? Digger driving included. After all, every day is a school day. If you go home having not learned anything, you've wasted a day if you ask me. Nub of the issue as regards OP- would you consider someone with two years climbing experience and a decent attitute to be a viable candidate for a post with your company? There's no point arguing the toss here gents- all the tree guys think 'how hard is it, pulling some levers' and all the digger guys think 'how hard is it, climb up the tree and cut bits off' There's far more to both than meets the eye, can we at least agree on that? Both unskilled and immensely skilled persons are present in both trades.
  18. My point is that I can pick things up quickly. As can you apparently, given your skill with the digger. 3 weeks solid climbing and I'm sure I'd feel quite proficient also, especially given that I'm already handy with a saw on the ground. Do you truly believe that someone who has climbed day in, day out for two years is not experienced? That it takes five years? That's elevating the trade almost to the level of a lawyer or medical professional, which is quite frankly laughable.
  19. Look at my avatar. You think you could do that? Including laying the tuft you've stripped off neatly behind you (with the bucket on backwards) when you can't swing round properly as the counterweight will hit the bank, but swinging round as far as you can with the boom fully offset risks tipping the machine down the 60 degree bank if you're not careful? I reckon you could easily after two years doing only that sort of stuff. And I reckon after two years doing only tree climbing I could do the tree you describe no problem. I'm not saying one is more skilled than the other (though you tree surgeons often seem to think you're Gods gift ) Two years constant work in a trade is enough to become proficient enough to reply to an advert saying 'Trade X wanted, must have experience'. Which is what the OP was asking.
  20. Question- 1100 hours on a mini digger is nothing. It's essentially the same type of engine doing the same thing- one running a big flywheel, the other a hydraulic pump. Both subject via stress controls to fluctuating loads. Why then do so many chippers have new engines around this mark?
  21. Work smarter, not harder!
  22. Monkeys can also be trained to use capital letters....
  23. I've never climbed in my life, but I'm fairly sure that I'd pick it up and become proficient in a lot less time than that working full time at it. It's not rocket science after all. If you have genuinely have 'heaps of natural talent' then you pick things up quick. Diggers, tractors, chainsaws, welding, none of these take two years working full time to become proficient enough to jump straight into for a new company and not have to ask questions save for those that relate directly to the companies specific way of working.
  24. Second hand just as likely to go missing. Insurance not much more to cover the value of a new machine than second hand, and if new then you just get a new one if stolen. No messing about trying to find a second hand one in the same condition at the money the insurance company think yours was worth
  25. If you want them on a helmet, the Bilsom HV ones fit with a helmet mount.

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